Does it serve me how this morning swells open on the sky like peace?
Does it serve me to swim in this sharp gold light while the horsetail clouds
splay on the turquoise sky and the pair of ravens fly side by side quorking
their morning chat, more ordinary than the first sip of fresh-ground coffee?
Whatever of this I bury in my soft fleece pocket will shrivel by noon
or wither like the dead skink on the doorstep, the browning of fall apples.
The shrill voices of those who shred the universe into flags of hate
will drown out the seeds of purple grass swaying against the adobe wall.
There must be soft ribbons to glean from here, perhaps pine-green grosgrain
sliced the width of slivers, slender threads to tie through the day
to all that is beautiful. One left for the walking stick insect who takes his name
from a phantom. One for the goatshead burr that wants nothing
more than to rankle. One for the snake doctor dragonfly. One in my hair.
I promise not to compare this morning to any other. I have walked this
gravel road before. That confidence serves as a platter, tray, a bowl,
open palm to the days before me, road to the other side.
—Mary Oliver, in Devotions
My sister bakes two loaves, watching
through the oven window for gold,
a crust you could tap before you cut it,
that would crunch in your teeth
or hold the heat until you slather
this smell of heaven with what melts
and runs down your fingers.
She has no thought to who might eat the bread.
The FedEx driver delivers the new hummingbird
feeder, and the dogs return from a romp chasing
squirrels, the neighbor drops in to borrow
one half-cup of sugar, and two cardinals
bathe in the white bird bath so she had little
thought of saving and knows to spend it freely
even as two gray mice sneak in that night
to grab what fell to the floor in slicing.